Toronto Star

La Loche school shooter to be sentenced as an adult

Young man was 17 at the time of 2016 incident where four killed, now faces possible life sentence

- COLETTE DERWORIZ THE CANADIAN PRESS

LA LOCHE, SASK.— A young man who was days away from his 18th birthday when he shot up a home and school in northern Saskatchew­an, killing four people, is facing a life sentence after a judge ruled Friday that he should be treated as an adult.

Judge Janet McIvor brought down her decision in La Loche, the remote community where the shooting happened in January 2016.

Two teenage brothers were killed in their home before the shooter went to the school where he gunned down a teacher and a teacher’s aide. Seven others were injured.

The young man, who is now 20, pleaded guilty in October 2016 to two counts of first-degree murder, two counts of second-degree murder and seven counts of attempted murder.

McIvor said there was evidence that the shooter was at a high risk to reoffend and suggested a youth sentence would not be appropriat­e because of the shooting’s profound impact on the community.

The judge noted the “incredible level of violence” against the teen boys and at the school. She also said the school shooting was “planned and calculated” and pointed out that the killer had shot teacher Adam Wood twice at close range.

The shooter faces the prospect of life in prison with no chance at parole for at least 10 years. Lawyers are to make submission­s on the final sentence March 16. A publicatio­n ban remains on the young man’s name until at least then.

The defence had argued he should be sentenced as a youth because he suffers from fetal alcohol syndrome and has cognitive problems that have affected his maturity. “We obviously are disappoint­ed in the result,” defence lawyer Darren Kraushaar said outside court Friday.

The Crown and many of the victims had asked the teen be sentenced as an adult. “This was a very tragic event and we felt that we could make an applicatio­n for an adult sentence, because there were very compelling reasons for it. We appreciate that the court listened to our submission­s,” Crown prosecutor Pouria Tabrizi-Reardigan said.

“I hope that the community can have closure at this point.”

La Loche Mayor Robert St. Pierre said it is the decision he and many in the community wanted, but it doesn’t solve everything.

There has been very little explanatio­n for the shooter’s motive. There were suggestion­s in the aftermath that the teen had been bullied at school, but he told police that wasn’t the case.

He told officers that he regretted shooting the two brothers, that they weren’t part of the plan. Asked what his plan was, he responded: “Go to the school and shoot the f---ing kids.” Asked who he was targeting, he said: “Nobody.”

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